And now this the time to summarise all these different Things (22?) that I learned through The 23 Things for Research Programme. As a whole, I believe the programme was very insightful and I would definitely recommend it to anyone starting a PhD. Building or improving your professional online presence is the secret of the success. Maybe yes, maybe no... Who knows? Throughout this programme, I developed a cohesive and up-to-date profile in LinkedIn and Researchgate. The programme helped me to think about my personal brand, to set up Mendeley, my Reference Management tool and to recognise the importance of other tools for exploring source of information (Wikipedia), images online (Flickr, Pinterest), sharing findings (Prezi Google Public Data Explorer), disseminating research work (Open Access), maximising research impact (Bibliometrics and Altmetrics), connecting with other researchers (Webinars, Hangouts, Doodle), sharing data (Google Drive), searching for funding (Research Prof
Yes! Grab any opportunity. Funding opportunities and potential funding sources like Reseacrh Professional webpage and Euraxess are necessary for starting, being productive and completing a PhD project. I signed up Research Professional and I started to look for research funding opportunities in my field. Creating and maintaining a personal website is an amazing opportunity to promote yourself, tell the world who you are, what you do what your mission and your GOALS. A standalone website could definitely reflect your personality and your achievements better than any other social media like LinkedIn or Twitter. Creating my own Website could be included in my long-term plans (goals?). Until then I can promote my research work through a cohesive and up-to-date LinkedIn profile. Also, I am currently completing my profile page at surrey.ac.uk. Learning how to promote yourself and how to grab an OPPORTUNITY is a skill that you should develop and train while in your PhD studies!